This thesis explores and compares the ways in which citizenship during the interwar period was formulated through an understanding of both the damaging effects, yet also potential benefits, of living in the modern city. In both Manchester and Chicago, municipal government and local voluntary associations cooperated in an attempt to create citizens who were physically healthy and imbued with the spirit of urban community. This understanding of citizenship challenges the recent historiography of Britain and the US, which has emphasised the rising importance of national identity between the wars, and the linking of citizenship to the democratic responsibility of exercising the right to vote. As a comparative analysis, it argues for viewing th...
This paper argues that the Edwardian municipal park represents a significant transition from the hig...
It is often overlooked that the initiatives of private individuals and bodies have always been a maj...
Over the course of the nineteenth century, while many towns and cities grew at a remarkable rate, in...
This thesis explores and compares the ways in which citizenship during the interwar period was formu...
This article is about interwar Britain, civic education, and the theoretical and practical expressio...
Taking its cue from the ‘material turn’ of recent years, this article examines the connections betwe...
Taking its cue from the ‘material turn’ of recent years, this survey examines the connections betwee...
Councillors and locals alike in Buxton, Derbyshire, had a strong sense of civic identity relating to...
The notion of citizenship, as conventionally perceived of in Western tradition, seems to loose its ...
The adoption of non-traditional housing by local authorities is customarily explained in terms of ec...
© 2001 Dr. Melissa PermezelHow people enact citizenship and participate as active and engaged citize...
Scholars and policy-makers alike argue that government efforts to empower citizens and build cohesiv...
This dissertation explores how the practice of city planning in New York City came to incorporate "c...
This study is an attempt to understand community participation in an American suburb. The research t...
Citizenship is an important social status that indicates a person is a legitimate member of a nation...
This paper argues that the Edwardian municipal park represents a significant transition from the hig...
It is often overlooked that the initiatives of private individuals and bodies have always been a maj...
Over the course of the nineteenth century, while many towns and cities grew at a remarkable rate, in...
This thesis explores and compares the ways in which citizenship during the interwar period was formu...
This article is about interwar Britain, civic education, and the theoretical and practical expressio...
Taking its cue from the ‘material turn’ of recent years, this article examines the connections betwe...
Taking its cue from the ‘material turn’ of recent years, this survey examines the connections betwee...
Councillors and locals alike in Buxton, Derbyshire, had a strong sense of civic identity relating to...
The notion of citizenship, as conventionally perceived of in Western tradition, seems to loose its ...
The adoption of non-traditional housing by local authorities is customarily explained in terms of ec...
© 2001 Dr. Melissa PermezelHow people enact citizenship and participate as active and engaged citize...
Scholars and policy-makers alike argue that government efforts to empower citizens and build cohesiv...
This dissertation explores how the practice of city planning in New York City came to incorporate "c...
This study is an attempt to understand community participation in an American suburb. The research t...
Citizenship is an important social status that indicates a person is a legitimate member of a nation...
This paper argues that the Edwardian municipal park represents a significant transition from the hig...
It is often overlooked that the initiatives of private individuals and bodies have always been a maj...
Over the course of the nineteenth century, while many towns and cities grew at a remarkable rate, in...